EPL 100: Ranking the 100 Best English Premier League Players

The English Premier League 2013-14 season is nearly upon us, and Bleacher Report brings you the top 100 players coming into the new campaign.

The method used to grade and score the players will be revealed, while any new signings up until Sunday 11 August have been taken into account.

Eager to see who the top-rated player is, how your team's new signings measure up to the existing crop or to check on any upsets?

The rankings are designed to represent where the players are right now, meaning last season's play is a major factor in their scoring. Nemanja Vidic misses out on the top 100 despite getting some minutes under his belt in preseason because no one can be sure what state he's in at the moment.

There's some room to wiggle too, and Shinji Kagawa is a great example of this: A poor 2012-13 season wasn't exactly his fault, and he stands to improve tenfold should David Moyes use him correctly.

Method

Shaun Botterill/Getty ImagesClaude Makelele would have scored obscenely high on our metric for anchor defensive midfielders.

In ranking our top 100 players for the coming 2013-14 English Premier League season, we produced a method of scoring each player out of 100 in accordance with his position and individual attributes.

We selected the top five attributes critical to each position on the pitch, then weighted those attributes in order of importance to the position.

For example, when it comes to deep-lying forwards, movement between the lines and the ability to link play is far more important than scoring headers, and that's reflected in the formula we created.

Likewise, it's unfair to grade Andy Carroll on the same metric as Robin van Persie, so we created 18 different positions with different criteria to judge. Sweeper keepers like Hugo Lloris have been separated from regular keepers, there are eight types of midfielders and even surging centre-backs have been split from traditional ones.

We won't reveal the full formula and basis for marking, but here's an example of exactly how the anchor defensive midfield role was analysed and graded.

Attribute

Weighting (out of 100)

Anticipation/Positioning

How aware is the player? We study his positional tendencies, how well he keeps the line of engagement and how quick he is to react to and pre-empt danger. You don't need to make a tackle/interception if you've cut the danger out before it's even reared its head.

30

Tracking

When his team is in a two versus three or three versus four situation, on the back foot, how well does he cope with midfield runners darting forward? Does he capitulate and get mixed up or track the appropriate man expertly in a Sven Bender-esque manner?

25

Tackling

Exactly what it says on the tin. How clean is the tackle, how does he approach it, how often does he commit fouls and earn yellow cards for poorly executed challenges? Is he forceful or timid?

20

Stamina

When under the cosh, how well does the player cope with switching targets consistently in the face of long spells of possession and pressure? How's his engine—can he get up and down the field all day?

15

Passing

Anchor midfielders don't have to be flashy passers, but it's still a big part of the game. Does he occasionally play above his station, or simply win the ball and lay it off as per his job description? Does he concentrate and hit short passes cleanly, or make mistakes in dangerous areas?

10

We graded 206 players on our metric to ensure we left no one out, with the top 100 making the official list.

In the event of a tie, we've simply asked, "who would benefit a team more at this moment in time?" and ranked them accordingly.

100. Leroy Fer, Norwich City

He failed a medical at Everton in January with his price set at £8.6 million, and now the Canaries have secured his signature for a lower fee of £5 million.

He's been playing as a No. 10 at times during preseason, and Chris Hughton will be hoping his Dutch international will be able to feed £8.5 million poacher Ricky van Wolfswinkel with enough chances to fire them to a midtable finish once again.

Fer is a beastly player, capable of playing almost every role in central midfield, and combines immense strength and size with respectable pace and awesome aerial ability.

99. Jack Cork, Southampton

Michael Steele/Getty Images

Position: Deep-lying playmaker

Score: 73.7

Jack Cork faces a battle to keep his spot in the Southampton starting XI this season. Despite Cork excelling with them for two straight years, Mauricio Pochettino has brought in fresh, new options who will challenge him.

The former Chelsea man's partnership with Morgan Schneiderlin has seen Saints become solid and pass-heavy in midfield, with Cork the general dictating play.

He's effective in most formations and holds that "possession DNA" so many wish the England national team would adopt—Roy Hodgson could do a lot worse than call young Jack up to his squad.

Even with a reduced number of starts this season, Cork will be an effective option for Southampton.

98. Adam Lallana, Southampton

If Adam Lallana could stay fit, we'd have an England international on our hands.

His loyalty to Southampton and determination to play Premier League football with his boyhood club are admirable, and as a result he's the hero of the terraces.

His first touch, technique and awareness are phenomenal, and there are few players in this league that can take a ball out of the air more cleanly than Lallana.

He needs to up his goal tally in 2013, but that should come naturally with a succession of games under his belt. His movement off the ball is of the highest order, and if his teammates can find him regularly, he can reach double figures.

96. Marco Van Ginkel, Chelsea

Stanley Chou/Getty Images

Position: Central midfielder

Score: 73.8

Marco van Ginkel has taken one of the biggest risks possible this transfer window, swapping guaranteed first-team and UEFA Europa League football with Vitesse Arnhem for a shot at the Chelsea first team.

According to The Guardian, he's been assured by Jose Mourinho he'll get games and has played a large part in the Blues' preseason preparations, drawing some glamorous comparisons to Chelsea hero Frank Lampard.

95. Fabricio Coloccini, Newcastle United

Newcastle supporters will enjoy one final year of Fabricio Coloccini, as he pledged his allegiance to them in thanks to the incredible support they've shown down the years.

The shaggy-haired rock has been a mainstay at the heart of the defence for half a decade, experiencing both the highs of European football and the lows of relegation to the Championship.

Aerially he's fantastic, while he also boasts wonderful awareness of what's going on behind him. He and Tim Krul have developed a good understanding, and it's only fitness issues—at both ends—that have stopped them becoming a dominant force together.

94. Tomas Rosicky, Arsenal

Masashi Hara/Getty Images

Position: No. 10

Score: 74.1

What to make of Tomas Rosicky?

He's a frustrating case, as when he's on form and injury-free he can unlock almost any defence in world football. Unfortunately, those days are few and far between, and Rosicky doesn't play to his full potential often enough.

He's formed a fantastic, innate understanding with Santi Cazorla and drifts in and out of a central position in Arsene Wenger's 4-3-3/4-2-3-1 hybrid formation.

The system suits him, the players suit him and the football plays to his strengths. All Arsenal fans can really ask for is a bit of consistency.

91. Stephane Sessegnon, Sunderland

Robert Cianflone/Getty Images

Position: No. 10

Score: 74.2

Sunderland's talisman in chief, Stephane Sessegnon, will go down as one of Steve Bruce's greatest ever purchases.

The Benin international combines great creativity and awareness in the hole behind the striker with power and strength on the ball. It's a wonderful combination and is extremely hard to deal with if you're tracking and covering the man.

Sessegnon has felt the heavy burden of expectation, creating most of the team's openings for the past three seasons. If he plays well, Sunderland can win; if he doesn't, they rarely pick up any points.

His sending-off against Aston Villa last season sparked fears the Black Cats would go down in his absence.

90. Arouna Kone, Everton

Paul Thomas/Getty Images

Position: Deep-Lying Forward

Score: 74.3

The situation Arouna Kone found himself in this summer was absolutely ideal.

Despite suffering relegation with Wigan Athletic at the end of last season, Roberto Martinez's appointment at Everton facilitated the Ivorian's move to join him at a bigger, better Premier League club.

He walks into a footballing system he's had 12 months of experience in and is expected to take up his role as a deep-lying centre-forward in the 3-4-3/4-3-3 formation.

His linkup play is heavily underrated, while he provides the size and presence his team can lean on if the going gets tough. Kone is expected to pick up exactly where he left off at the end of the 2012-13 campaign.

89. Steven Pienaar, Everton

Though not quite at his best last year, Steven Pienaar remains one of Everton’s key players and will once again be central to his side's offensive approach this season.

While Leighton Baines received considerable acclaim for his creative return, it was Pienaar who carved out more chances from open play last season. In fact, aside from Baines, no other Everton player fashioned out half as much as the South African, and he will once again be expected to orchestrate attacks and unlock defences.

It will be interesting to see if he remains purely on the left under Roberto Martinez. It’s well known how effective he is playing in tandem with Baines, but it was something David Moyes began tinkering with towards the end of last season.

One or two Premier League defences appeared better prepared to stifle this partnership, and the fact Kevin Mirallas prefers cutting in off the left, as he did so well for Olympiakos, saw Pienaar moved around.

He started switching to the right more often and even spent phases of play behind the striker. Wherever he features, expect him to once again have a large say in Everton's attacking fortunes.

88. Youssouf Mulumbu, West Bromwich Albion

Youssouf Mulumbu goes about his business in a quiet, tidy fashion which remains unappreciated by the large majority of English Premier League fans.

He and Claudio Yacob formed a wonderful partnership at the base of Steve Clarke's 4-2-3-1 throughout the 2012-13 season, and the duo showed good understanding and versatility in moving to a 4-3-3, a 4-4-2 and a 3-5-2.

He's strong in the tackle, tracks his markers well and never commits too early or too vigorously—you'll find it hard to get past Mulumbu, dribbling or passing.

He's a Steve Clarke favourite due to his simple, direct style: retrieve the ball and start an attack in the simplest manner possible.

87. Andy Carroll, West Ham United

Ian Walton/Getty Images

Position: Target man

Score: 74.4

It's rare in football that a transfer results in three incredibly happy parties, but that's exactly what's happened in the case of Andy Carroll.

Liverpool were desperate to get rid of his wages and were willing to recoup what was possible from a £35 million outlay, West Ham were desperate to keep him around given his popularity with the fans and tactical fit under Sam Allardyce, while Carroll found another club willing to pay him tonnes of cash on a weekly basis.

Win, win, win.

Carroll now enters the season under immense pressure, but strikers in his mould—aerially dominant in a side that is predicated on playing to his strengths—will never fail to have an impact.

He's unplayable in the air and, if he can avoid ailments, could be a dark horse to be a top-five Premier League goalscorer in 2014.

85. Javier Hernandez, Manchester United

Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

Position: Poacher

Score: 74.5

Mexican forward Javier Hernandez could be forgiven for harbouring frustrations at his lack of first-team opportunities last season, having averaged a goal every 90 minutes for Manchester United in the Premier League.

Renowned for his finishing prowess, doubts had existed about Hernandez's ability outside of the penalty area. However, over the past 18 months, the Mexico forward has improved considerably in his all-round play.

How long he will be content to play a backup role remains to be seen, but the addition of a new manager at Old Trafford offers hope that he may see an increase in playing time in the coming months.

The 2013-14 season is a make-or-break campaign for Hernandez at Manchester United, with the striker in need of regular playing time. Given his phenomenal strike rate with both club and country, Hernandez remains one of the league's most feared forwards.

84. Mikel Arteta, Arsenal

Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images

Position: Deep-lying playmaker

Score: 74.5

Mikel Arteta is a strange case.

If he was played in his correct position, he'd soar up the rankings given his prowess in passing and patience on the ball. At Everton he was a regular in the assist column as a visionary No. 10 behind the striker, yet he's filling in at holding midfield for Arsenal, and it doesn't suit him.

Props to Arteta for fulfilling the manager's wishes without questioning the logic, but if the Gunners wish to progress and win a title, they cannot do so with Arteta screening the defence.

He's a pass master, both short and long, and controls the tempo extremely well to ensure the Gunners are dominant in possession.

Arteta's low grading is unfortunate but accurate, and if Arsene Wenger were to move him forward and secure a true defensive midfielder to break things up, this Spaniard would be a lot higher on this list.

82. Emanuele Giaccherini, Sunderland

Emanuele Giaccherini is a stunning coup for Sunderland, who, after just about surviving relegation, have secured the signature of a reigning Serie A champion.

The former Juventus man plays in almost every position imaginable, but preseason form indicates Paolo Di Canio sees him as a left-sided winger in a 4-2-3-1.

He goes a long way to taking away some of the pressure placed on Stephane Sessegnon to create and lead the team in the final third, and Black Cats fans are really eager to see what Giaccherini can do on a competitive platform.

He's got experience, know-how and hunger to make the Italy side for the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

81. Rickie Lambert, Southampton

Rickie Lambert has been doubted at every level he's played at, but fortunately for Southampton he's made a career out of proving people horribly wrong.

In League One he was a beast, but could he hack it in the Championship? Thirty-one goals later, Saints are heading for the English Premier League, but again he attracts extraordinary amounts of pessimism when it comes to predicting his goal tally.

Fifteen goals was his emphatic answer, and now there can be no doubt: Lambert is a Premier League player who fits the modern mould of the complete striker.

He was far too intelligent for the lower leagues, constantly moving and tormenting his markers before beating them in the air and firing the ball home from 40 yards.

80. Rafael, Manchester United

Rafael was a strong candidate for most improved player of the 2012-13 season, and Manchester United can finally feel convinced they've got a right-back who's a lock for the next decade.

Full-backs, on our metric, are graded extremely highly on positional intelligence and how well a player judges when to go forward and when not to.

That was Rafael's big weak point when he first came to England, and although it's not up to scratch just yet, it's definitely getting there.

His offensive presence is still stronger than his defensive presence, but the latter part of his game grew leaps and bounds last year. Forced to face off against Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale inside the span of a month last season, he had no choice but to get better.

79. Cheick Tiote, Newcastle United

Newcastle United picked up quite the bargain in Cheick Tiote, signing the midfielder from FC Twente for just £3.5 million in 2010.

He's featured heavily alongside Yohan Cabaye in central midfield for the Magpies, and it was no surprise when Chelsea were interested in both at the end of the 2012 summer window, as reported by the Metro.

Tiote is a monstrous defensive midfielder who tackles cleanly and powers his way through games. He's bigger, stronger and far more aggressive than most, but don't underrate the technical side of his game—he's a solid passer of the ball too.

78. Sebastien Bassong, Norwich City

If it weren't for Norwich City's stingy defence last season, their goalscoring issues at the other end of the pitch could have been fatal.

Michael Turner and Sebastian Bassong lead an exemplary defensive line, and many fans were left stupefied when they comfortably shut out Manchester United in a 1-0 win in 2012.

Bassong is the standout, and while he doesn't offer the same goal threat Turner does, he has many of the requisites a modern centre-back dreams of.

He has extraordinary strength, brilliant recovery pace and an excellent ability to filter out wide and cover his full-back. He keeps his distances between players on the line extremely well, ensuring no man—not poacher, not target man—can bully the Canaries.

77. Jores Okore, Aston Villa

Valerio Pennicino/Getty Images

Position: Centre-Back

Score: 74.7

The signing of Jores Okore represents a real coup for Aston Villa as they prepare for another big season, and many fans of other clubs were disappointed they didn't pursue the Danish centre-half as well.

Especially when he only cost £4 million.

Paul Lambert has recruited a monstrous young lad who has power, pace, a great leap and a wonderful positional sense.

His recovery speed is something many in his position would crave, while his experience in the UEFA Champions League against Shakhtar Donetsk, Chelsea and Juventus should be very useful while acclimating to the EPL.

Okore walks into the Villa side as the best central defender on the books, giving Lambert a real selection dilemma when it comes to captain Ron Vlaar and up-and-comer Nathan Baker.

75. Chico Flores, Swansea City

Chico is one of the most un-Spanish Spaniards to be playing the game right now.

His outlook is physical, brutish and dominant, far removed from your typical Iberian centre-back who passes gracefully, Chico steams in and deals with danger the old-fashioned way.

He's very strong in the air, uncompromising in the challenge and loves to step forward and intercept. He rarely tries a long pass, instead dumping it off to central defensive partner Ashley Williams or one of his more creative midfielders.

He's a manager's dream, playing at maximum velocity every game, sticking his head in where it hurts and never overstepping his responsibilities.

74. Nacho Monreal, Arsenal

Arsene Wenger secured the perfect signing in Nacho Monreal of Malaga last January, and the club have looked much stronger in that position as a result of the transfer.

No longer does Wenger have to rely on Kieran Gibbs' highly susceptible legs, and Monreal's presence allows the manager to give Gibbs the appropriate rest he needs.

Monreal is by no means a slouch, and the Gunners were fortunate to sign him for such a low price. He has spent the last season and a half tormenting opposing full-backs, whipping in dangerous crosses and snuffing out attacks in his own defensive third.

He works incredibly hard, passes very well and looks like the all-round prospect Gibbs aspires to become.

With a full preseason under his belt with the Gunners, expect even more from Monreal.

73. Ashley Young, Manchester United

Ashley Young has struggled to live up to his hefty £16 million fee due to a succession of injuries during his time at Old Trafford.

But he's the sort of player who can thrive under David Moyes, and the Scot is likely to give his winger an extended stay in the first team given the contractual situation of Nani.

His technique is superb, while Young continues to boast great pace, agility and trickery on the ball. He's taken the term "slippery" a little too far in some people's books, but he's still capable of delivering an inch-perfect cross or curling it round the keeper's finger tips from 25 yards away.

Wilfried Zaha would be wise to look to him for some guidance on how to avoid hefty challenges and targeting from defenders.

72. Iago Aspas, Liverpool

There'll be a lot of question marks regarding Iago Aspas' ability from the lay fan, but La Liga aficionados will know Liverpool have grabbed a bargain.

Aspas was a star on a poor Celta de Vigo side last season and could have made the move to the English Premier League in January when he hit peak form.

Instead he held out, helped save the club from relegation by a single point and scored 12 goals in the process. Job done, and Celta receive approximately £7 million for his services after wishing him well.

He works insanely hard and boasts wonderful movement, dipping in and out of the forward line and pulling the strings for the strikers. He's got a wonderful leap and a remarkable heading ability given his size, while some good form in preseason has given Brendan Rodgers quite the selection dilemma.

70. Gary Cahill, Chelsea

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Position: Centre-back

Score: 75.1

With the decline of John Terry and Jose Mourinho's apparent willingness to continue with the back line he inherited, Gary Cahill finds himself in a great position to stamp his authority on a starting role.

Branislav Ivanovic will likely timeshare the right-back and centre-back slots, making Cahill, at the very worst, third on the central defensive depth chart.

He's an assured passer who dominates aerially and, after developing a knack for scoring goals at Bolton Wanderers, has used that to great effect in a Chelsea shirt.

Overhead kicks, volleys, thumping headers...you name it, he can do it. Super technique for a centre-back.

69. Aaron Lennon, Tottenham Hotspur

Much was made of Gareth Bale's absence toward the end of last season, but it would be unfair to suggest Tottenham faltered solely due to the Welshman's ailment.

Aaron Lennon provides the sort of natural width very few players do in the modern game, sticking to the right side of the pitch as a right-footed player and stretching it to make space for others.

Both Bale and Lennon went down and Spurs' lack of depth on the wings was brought to the fore, with the likes of Gylfi Sigurdsson unable to replicate their offerings and Andros Townsend out on loan at Queens Park Rangers.

Lennon's crossing leaves something to be desired, but he can worm his way into the penalty area with his immense quickness and create from a narrower angle.

67. Wilfried Bony, Swansea City

Wilfried Bony, coming off a 31-goal season with Vitesse Arnhem, was one of the hottest striking properties on the market.

Top clubs shied away, reluctant to take a gamble on a pricey Eredivisie talent, but Swansea bit quickly and paid the £12 million fee.

Early form suggests Michael Laudrup has struck gold once again, as the debate over whether the Ivorian's goals came from poor defending or superb movement is gradually being settled—it's the latter, in case you were wondering.

Bony has the ability to take the pressure off Michu's shoulders and contribute heavily to the team, boasting great close control and an excellent understanding in buildup play.

He and Michu are already dropping in and out of each other's positions, driving defences up the wall.

65. Yohan Cabaye, Newcastle United

Newcastle's Yohan Cabaye is now under pressure to perform well and retain his starting spot in France's starting XI.

That's good news for the Magpies, who will expect a season full of creativity, leadership and goals from the centre of the park.

Like so many of Alan Pardew's key players the 27-year-old struggled with injury issues throughout the 2012-13 campaign, and without their talisman the club struggled to control games and create from central areas.

Cabaye brings set-piece prowess, good positional awareness and a spark of creativity and ingenuity.

64. Theo Walcott, Arsenal

After scoring 14 and assisting 10 in the English Premier League last season, you might have expected Theo Walcott to be pushing the top 25 in our rankings.

But a big part of a wide forward's job is keeping his cool in order to make the correct decision, and Walcott still struggles with that despite six years of experience in England's top tier.

He wants to play as a central striker, and while he can be devastating against lesser defences, he's too limited (technically and physically) to play as a centre-forward against the best sides in Europe.

His raw pace is suited to the wider areas, where he can isolate full-backs and hit them one vs. one on the counter, and if he learns to make the right choices at high speed, he can be a late-blooming elite-tier wide man.

63. Rio Ferdinand, Manchester United

Brendon Thorne/Getty Images

Position: Ball-playing centre-back

Score: 75.4

Two injury-ridden, sub-par seasons from Rio Ferdinand and we thought he was on the way out, but over the course of the 2012-13 campaign, he leveled out as one of the better Premier League centre-backs.

He put his troublesome back ailments on the shelf and managed his fitness carefully, turning in 26 league starts and making an effort to guide the younger central defenders on the team.

Ferdinand participated in the thrilling encounter with Real Madrid and looked at home over the course of 180 minutes, while also contributing heavily to Sir Alex Ferguson's plan to nullify Gareth Bale at White Hart Lane.

Rio stepping up meant Manchester United barely felt the loss of Nemanja Vidic.

62. Aaron Ramsey, Arsenal

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Position: Box-to-box midfielder

Score: 75.5

Aaron Ramsey enjoyed a real uplift in form for the final six weeks of the 2012-13 season. The reason? A multitude of factors, but playing him in a box-to-box role—rather than on the right wing—had a big say in proceedings.

He'll be surprisingly high on this list if you've not been watching him closely in 2013, but we can assure he's primed and ready to start growing after a rocky few years post-injury.

The Welshman had been terribly off-colour since the Ryan Shawcross incident, and for one so young to have something so horrendous happen, it's easy to see why his play seemed rusty and tentative.

He's finally coming out of his shell, and Arsene Wenger must be delighted to have his future star back with a smile on his face.

61. Brad Guzan, Aston Villa

David Rogers/Getty Images

Position: Goalkeeper

Score: 75.6

Many look at Christian Benteke's 19-goal haul in the English Premier League last season and suggest that's what kept Aston Villa up, but were it not for Brad Guzan's heroics they'd have been dead and buried a long time before May.

He re-signed with the Birmingham club after being released last summer. Paul Lambert promised him a shot at the first team and Guzan believed him, but no one expected it to come as soon as the third league game.

After some poor errors from Shay Given, the American was given his chance and never looked back, quickly blossoming into one of the finest keepers in the country.

His reflexes are brilliant, but what really stands out is his aerial ability. So confident is he to come out and claim crosses, Villa were unfathomed by the height and set-piece prowess the likes of Stoke and West Ham present.

59. Lukas Podolski, Arsenal

He pulled in 11 goals and nine assists in the league, netting particularly crucial strikes at Liverpool and Montpellier and bagging a hat-trick of assists against West Ham.

We graded him highly on his finishing, as his ability to smash one in from the tightest of angles is rivalled by few, while his decision-making is also relatively strong in comparison to those in his field.

He's not blessed with extraordinary pace nor supreme muscle but manages to engineer good situations for himself and others on a regular basis—a clever player.

57. David De Gea, Manchester United

When David De Gea was voted into the PFA Premier League Team of the Year, it was fine reward for two seasons of intensive work since joining the club in 2011.

Having been heavily criticised on a regular basis since joining the club and briefly deposed from his first-choice goalkeeper role in the process, the Spaniard should be commended for his attitude in fighting to turn the tide of public opinion.

Now, following a near-immaculate second half of the past campaign, he is finally being acknowledged as the outstanding goalkeeper that he is by the English media.

De Gea's shot-stopping skills have never been doubted—he is simply outstanding. However, having bulked up considerably, he is now a far more dominant force in dealing with crosses than he was upon signing with the Red Devils two years ago.

55. Asmir Begovic, Stoke City

Asmir Begovic was an inspired signing by Tony Pulis after Portsmouth fell into financial ruin, picking the Bosnia and Herzegovina international up for a mere £3.25 million.

He's since been linked with Manchester United—particularly when David De Gea was having trouble settling into English Premier League life—and will command at least six times that fee if he eventually leaves the Britannia Stadium.

Begovic is one of the better goalkeepers when it comes to reflex saves on his line, while he's also adept at barking orders and squeezing his defensive line out early after a set piece.

He's decent enough in one vs. one situations, though is sometimes left engaging the opponent in a slightly haphazard fashion.

53. Etienne Capoue, Tottenham Hotspur

Etienne Capoue has been added to Tottenham Hotspur's ranks by Andre Villas-Boas, creating immense depth in the holding midfield position.

The Frenchman faces a battle to make his nation's 2014 FIFA World Cup squad considering the level of competition in his area of expertise, but should he excel at White Hart Lane, he will make the cut.

Capoue has made his name as a crunching defensive midfielder who operates superbly in a 4-1-4-1 formation. He's the ideal anchor in a 4-5-1 or 4-3-3, while he could also form a serviceable portion of a double-pivot.

He can also drop in at centre-back, but only on an emergency basis. Signing the former Toulouse man is confirmation that AVB will not risk another season without sufficient midfield numbers.

**note: this deal is expected to be completed as the player completes his medical, as BBC Sport have reported. Should the deal fall through, Capoue will be removed from the rankings.

52. Paulinho, Tottenham Hotspur

He helped Corinthians win the 2012 FIFA Club World Cup against Chelsea, then formed a superb double-pivot with Luiz Gustavo to aid Brazil in securing the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup.

He's moved into a more expansive role in domestic football over the past 12 months—even playing as a No. 10 toward the back-end of the season—and brings immense versatility and strength to Andre Villas-Boas' midfield.

AVB is believed to be itching to play his beloved 4-3-3 formation, the one that went so well at FC Porto and so horribly wrong at Chelsea. He was wise enough to hold fire and wait until he had the right peripherals before installing it at White Hart Lane, and now he is free to do so.

51. Cesar Azpilicueta, Chelsea

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Position: Full-back

Score: 75.9

When Chelsea went in unopposed to sign Cesar Azpilicueta from Marseille for just £7 million, many questioned why several other UEFA Champions League clubs weren't rivalling the Blues for his signature.

"Dave," as the fans call him at Stamford Bridge, stands to lock down the starting right-back berth at Chelsea for the next several years, bringing high work-rate, studious defensive ability and attacking flair to the lineup.

He's within a shout of taking up a permanent fixture in the Spanish national side following Alvaro Arbeloa's fall from grace and continues to improve as a player.

Azpilicueta's great positional sense and inhuman amount of stamina pushed him up above most other full-backs in our rankings.

49. Tim Krul, Newcastle United

Newcastle were circling the drain late last season, and one of the main factors in their horrendous form was the season-ending injury to world-class goalkeeper Tim Krul.

Krul dislocated his shoulder during the 3-0 loss to fierce rivals Sunderland, forced to sit on the treatment table as the Magpies scraped clear of relegation.

Over the past 24 months, Krul has grown into a fantastic goalkeeper: first-choice for the Dutch national team under Louis van Gaal and a future UEFA Champions League shot-stopper for whatever the club.

He commands his box superbly, while his agility and reflexes on his line allow him to make some spectacular stops. His long lanky frame enables him to get to balls normally out of reach for most keepers while his strong frame enables him to fend off defenders in the air.

48. Victor Wanyama, Southampton

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Position: Anchor defensive midfielder

Score: 76.1

The signing of Victor Wanyama for Southampton is nothing short of a tremendous coup on Mauricio Pochettino's behalf, as the Kenyan could have easily signed and slotted into Manchester United or Liverpool's first XIs.

He's one of the strongest players in the game and boasts fantastic defensive instinct and awareness, comfortably shielding his defence by stepping out to make an interception.

He's forceful in the challenge and can mix it with the best. Wanyama's engine is good and he shows decent ability to track runners when his side is being counterattacked.

The only aspect of his game that let him down in our grading was his passing, as he can sometimes commit the cardinal sin of not double-checking his intended ball before committing. Teams can pick up easy interceptions in dangerous areas, and he will need to address this while with Southhampton this season.

47. Edin Dzeko, Manchester City

Edin Dzeko looks a man on fire in preseason, forging a fantastic Balkan relationship with Stevan Jovetic and banging home the goals.

If he takes that confidence into competitive fixtures, defences across the country will once again fear the towering Bosnian striker.

His linkup play and close control is looking exemplary, while he graded out particularly well for his aerial dominance and heading skills. With an extra yard of pace he'd have every attribute under the sun.

The addition of Jesus Navas has brought value to Dzeko's presence on the team sheet, giving him curling crosses to utilise with his large, muscular frame.

45. Fernandinho, Manchester City

At £30 million Fernandinho is the biggest risk Manuel Pellegrini and Txiki Begiristain have taken this summer, but all signs point toward the former Shakhtar Donetsk player being a success.

He provides the perfect tonic to Yaya Toure in holding midfield, displaying a reserved nature that should allow the Ivorian to burst forward with more regularity and cause damage.

Fernandinho loves to push forward and break tackles too and did so to great effect against Chelsea in the UEFA Champions League last season, but he can be caught out if a team plays into the space behind him—á la Borussia Dortmund in the Round of 16.

He was so desperate to move to Manchester City he waived £4 million owed to him by Shakhtar in order to enable the move, and a big season at both Premier League and UCL level could see him make a late run at the Brazilian 2014 FIFA World Cup squad.

44. Simon Mignolet, Liverpool

Alex Livesey/Getty Images

Position: Goalkeeper

Score: 76.3

Simon Mignolet—the man who has sparked so much fuss surrounding Pepe Reina and his circumstances at Liverpool.

The club felt, after three years of error-ridden performances from their usually-stellar Spaniard, that his approximate wages of £110,000-per-week weren't manageable and recruited a replacement to ensure Reina would exit the club.

Reina ended up fleeing to Napoli, and in his place the Belgian arrived. For £9 million he's an absolute steal, as consistently excellent performances over the past several seasons have successfully steered former club Sunderland away from relegation.

He faces stiff competition from Thibaut Courtois for a place in the national team and clearly felt he needed to be playing at a higher level. It doesn't get much better than a packed Anfield stadium on a Saturday afternoon.

43. Phil Jagielka, Everton

Some of Everton's defensive displays were masterful last season, and Phil Jagielka is at the heart of it all.

The former Sheffield United man graded extremely well on our metric for aerial presence, tracking of markers and runners as well as his awareness of what's going on around him.

A true leader, he marshalls the line, sets how high up the team play, takes the ball forward and delegates tracking assignments. He put in a number of outstanding individual performances last season, in particular against Queens Park Rangers to secure a vital point.

Another season at this calibre and he's well on his way to Brazil should England qualify.

The technique he boasts when striking, crossing, passing or dribbling is sublime, and he's one of the few wingers in the world almost every full-back fears.

He missed huge chunks of last season and was worked back into the side slowly in April but failed to get back up to speed. He should hit the ground running in 2013 and have a big say in how far Newcastle can climb.

40. Kevin Mirallas, Everton

Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Position: Inverted winger

Score: 76.7

There were times last season when Kevin Mirallas was simply out of this world.

His goal against Stoke City, in which he took the ball from inside his own half, turned the defence inside out and slotted home with aplomb, is what he should be doing on a regular basis if he weren't so prone to knocks.

The amount of times Mirallas would hop onto the sidelines shaking his head or nursing his ankle was frustrating for Everton fans, as they know they have an electric talent on their hands who needs to be playing every game in order to make their side a force.

He boasts wonderful acceleration, top-end speed and his close control at pace is remarkable.

39. Dimitar Berbatov, Fulham

We were surprised, after grading every player in the system, that Dimitar Berbatov came out so high. You probably will be too.

But that just goes to show how thoroughly underrated he is by all—bar Fulham fans—and how easy it is to forget what a magician he can be when he gets on the ball in the right areas.

It wasn't long ago that he was playing for Manchester United, busy winning the Premier League Golden Boot after a solid 20-goal haul, and his game hasn't declined due to the fact its founded on technical abilities.

His awareness, ability to create space and unbelievable technique make him a real asset for Martin Jol, and most will agree the Cottagers pulled off a real coup on deadline day in 2012 to grab the Bulgarian.

He could still be plying his trade at a UEFA Champions League club with ease.

37. Matija Nastasic, Manchester City

In a trade, of sorts, with Fiorentina last season, Manchester City acquired little-known centre-back Matija Nastasic and shedded the unwanted Stefan Savic.

Savic has gone on to prosper in purple, while Nastasic has stunned in sky blue: The 20-year-old was a criminal omission from the PFA Young Player of the Year Awards after becoming the mainstay in City's defence.

The Serbian international shows Laurent Koscielny-esque reading of the game and, as a result of seeing things earlier than most, negates his smaller stature.

He's seen off bigger, more physical opponents such as Christian Benteke and quicker, more instinctive players such as Theo Walcott.

Nastasic is already one of the Premier League's best central defenders.

36. David Luiz, Chelsea

Scott Heavey/Getty Images

Position: Surging Centre-Back

Score: 77

Critics of David Luiz—and there are many—were left flabbergasted after some fantastic performances in the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup.

Moving forward he was confident and brought creativity that Luiz Gustavo and Paulinho simply could not, while at the back he was more assured than ever and made a unbelievable goal-line clearance to keep the Selecao in control in the final.

He returns to Chelsea still the terrace hero of seasons past, and with dodgy rumours regarding his sale firmly quashed, he can look forward to cementing a first-choice partnership in the heart of the Blues' defence with either Branislav Ivanovic or Gary Cahill.

Expect big things from Luiz as he continues a meteoric rise in football fans' estimations.

35. Ashley Cole, Chelsea

Ashley Cole was quite content to stick around at Chelsea for another season, and the fans are happy to continue watching him roam the left flank.

He's far more defensively orientated than most top-level full-backs, and it's refreshing to see a modern defender so conscientious when it comes to defending his flank and mopping up any danger.

He picks the right time to go forward but perhaps doesn't have as much of an impact in the final third as some would like: Whether that's down to a lack of chemistry of Eden Hazard, tiring legs or basic instruction, we can't be certain.

Jose Mourinho returns and will be odds-on to get the very best out of Cole once again.

34. Romelu Lukaku, Chelsea

Unless Wayne Rooney signs, the sight of Romelu Lukaku taking a place on the bench for Chelsea on the opening day against Hull City will anger the Stamford Bridge faithful.

His 17 goals from 20 starts for West Bromwich Albion was arguably the most impressive haul across the entire English Premier League, and the time is right to let him lead the line ahead of Fernando Torres and Demba Ba.

He's the complete forward, but at just 20 years of age still has massive room for growth. Physically he can be unplayable, but he has a surprising amount of top-end speed and a wonderful eye for a pass.

He could effectively play in any of the forward roles—be it poacher or deep-lying—but we've graded him as a target man as it suits his burgeoning attributes the best.

33. Frank Lampard, Chelsea

Chelsea's record goalscorer Frank Lampard signed on for another year before season's end, with Roman Abramovich finally caving to public opinion.

He's worth it, no question, and his strike tally of 203 goals is only going to improve with another campaign at Stamford Bridge coming up.

Jose Mourinho has a wealth of options in midfield and will likely rotate to keep everyone fresh. This suits Lampard down to the ground at 35 years of age, as, despite his incredible fitness levels, he is experiencing a natural physical decline.

His ability to arrive in the penalty area late and lap up easy goals will never diminish, though.

Dembele has developed a taste for tackling, but relies more on his positional sense than anything else to snuff out danger as early as possible. His size is an advantage when he chooses to steam forward, and his forward's background means he seldom gets a nose bleed when appearing in and around the box.

31. Leighton Baines, Everton

Leighton Baines was the English Premier League's best left-back last season, prompting clamours for him to start on a consistent basis for England.

Going forward he's a menace, playing neat triangles and give-and-gos with Steven Pienaar and Marouane Fellaini to wreak havoc down the left-hand side for the Toffees.

Under Roberto Martinez his role will likely be similar, as even if the Spaniard switches to a 3-4-3, Baines basically plays as a wing-back anyway.

Defensively Baines didn't score as highly as several full-backs, but his crossing tipped him over the edge; He was the most accurate crosser in the Premier League last year, and created a bucket-load of chances for the key attackers around him.

Watch out for the "Baines underlap" becoming an actual footballing term.

29. Jan Vertonghen, Tottenham Hotspur

Jan Vertonghen was an inspired signing by Tottenham last summer, securing a true ball-playing centre-back for a relative bargain fee.

He's become a key player at White Hart Lane, marshalling the high defensive line and surging forward to create mismatches in the midfield.

His cameos at left-back for club and country have enabled him to stretch his legs and run with the ball at his feet, and now he's got a taste for it.

At the back he's dominant in the air, switches targets extremely well and uses his pace to chase down runners. His absence at the start of the season, caused by horrendous conditions in the Barclay's Asia Tour, is a huge blow for Spurs to take.

28. Steven Gerrard, Liverpool

Steven Gerrard enjoyed something of a renaissance last season after Brendan Rodgers cleverly crafted him a regista-esque role.

He was suffering further forward due to that injection of pace disappearing, but he can still thread the eye of a needle with a pass from 50 yards, and Liverpool used that to their full advantage.

With speedsters to run the channels and a hardworking Jordan Henderson to occupy the markers in front of him, Gerrard found it easy to drop in, collect the ball from his centre-backs and wreak havoc.

Teams needed to focus on putting a man on Gerrard—á la Duda on Ilkay Gundogan, for example—but only Southampton's Mauricio Pochettino was wise enough to devise a plan to stop him. Saints won 3-1, inflicting the Reds' only defeat across the final 12 Premier League games.

Doubts about Gerrard's durability have been shelved for now, as he can expect to prosper in this role for another two seasons yet.

26. Andre Schuerrle, Chelsea

Andre Schuerrle joined Chelsea this summer on the back of a stellar Bundesliga campaign with Bayer Leverkusen.

The Werkself, with Sami Hyypia at the helm, shocked many by constructing a brilliant team capable of matching UEFA Champions finalists Borussia Dortmund all the way in the league.

Schuerrle was a huge part of the team, contributing 11 goals and seven assists from the left side of a 4-3-3 built on pace and power on the counterattack.

Schuerrle stands to fit in with Jose Mourinho's way of playing—also built on explosive, direct attacks—extremely well. He will likely avoid any kind of double-marking due to the star-studded presence of Eden Hazard and Juan Mata on the same team.

He's walking into a system that suits him, he's first choice and on form—expect a big year from the £18 million man.

25. Sandro, Tottenham Hotspur

Paul Gilham/Getty Images

Position: Anchor midfielder

Score: 78.1

When Sandro fell to the ground at Loftus Road in January clutching his knee, it was pretty evident he was in immense pain. The subsequent announcement that he'd be out for the rest of the reason was no surprise.

This was the crushing blow in Tottenham's season, the one that may well have cost them a place in the UEFA Champions League for the 2013-14 campaign.

Sandro's influence is huge, but not in the obvious way as with many who play in the role Claude Makelele has made so famous in the 21st century.

Spurs had no one else on the roster even remotely capable of replacing his eye for an interception and crunching presence in front of the back four, and they couldn't afford to purchase a replacement such is his quality.

He remains one of the world's best screening midfielders and should be primed to start fresh in August.

24. Daniel Sturridge, Liverpool

Brendan Rodgers made an inspired signing in January in the form of Daniel Sturridge, taking a relative gamble to bring him to Anfield for £12 million.

In just 11 English Premier League starts, the England international grabbed 10 goals and three assists, earning a starting spot in Roy Hodgson's national side after excelling in Luis Suarez's absence.

He and Philippe Coutinho destroyed Newcastle United 6-0 in the back end of April, then bagged a hat-trick for himself at Craven Cottage to affirm his burgeoning talents.

He's a wicked finisher from anywhere within 20 yards from goal, but his technique is also fantastic. He likes to drop in and out of the line rather than play exclusively on the shoulder, and his passing game improves with every weekend gone by.

23. Branislav Ivanovic, Chelsea

Stanley Chou/Getty Images

Position: Centre-back

Score: 78.2

Branislav Ivanovic has been a mainstay in the Chelsea defence since signing in 2008, offering consistency, reliability and versatility.

He's monstrous in the air and boasts incredible movement and agility when jockeying for position and space. His goalscoring record from corners is incredible, and perhaps his most important ever goal came in the dying minutes of the UEFA Europa League final against Benfica.

Flying forward from full-back, he is better than most converted central defenders, but he still has his limitations on the technical side of the game.

That doesn't hinder him when marshalling the middle, though, and he uses a traditional blend of brute force and powerful moves to get the better of his markers.

21. Hugo Lloris, Tottenham Hotspur

Hugo Lloris was a surprise signing at Tottenham given the presence of Brad Friedel, but Andre Villas-Boas' move for the French goalkeeper was well justified by season's end.

AVB wanted to install a high defensive line at White Hart Lane and had nearly all the tools to do so: Younes Kaboul and Jan Vertonghen have the pace and awareness to play it, but Friedel is not your prototypical sweeper keeper.

Lloris is, and he excelled all season in storming out from the edge of his area to mop up long balls and hopeful punts.

Rather than play in goal, Lloris is more the very last line of defence, using his feet in buildup play and confidently claiming crosses and high balls early on.

It's a valuable commodity to have, and the Frenchman is only going to get better.

20. Vincent Kompany, Manchester City

Vincent Kompany needs to put a dismal 2012-13 season behind him and lead Manchester City into a new lease of life.

Injuries and a severe drop-off in form hampered the Belgian's performances last year, and if it weren't for the remarkable growth of Matija Nastasic, City may well have been further off the pace.

On form, Kompany is one of the world's best central defenders. Aerially he is superb, while he also represents a commanding presence in defence and adjusts the height of his line extremely well.

He's got that sliver of pace so many centre-backs crave, while he's also developed excellent ball-playing skills as a byproduct of deputising in defensive midfield.

Kompany is not the highest-ranked defender on this list due to poor form over the past 12 months, but there's every chance he will be this time next season should he impress in the manner we all expect.

19. Jack Wilshere, Arsenal

"Jack Wilshere will be a world-beater...if he can stay fit." How tired are we of hearing this phrase uttered?

Nevertheless, it rings true: Wilshere has missed large chunks of playing time due to long-term injuries, and fans are simply hoping he's getting them out of the way early in his career.

Despite being just 21 years of age, what he has shown us so far is beyond superb. He offers the current crop of England players something no one can replicate—an ability to get his head down and take players on or keep it simple in the possession game.

Roy Hodgson wants to build his side around him, Arsene Wenger wants to do the same. His engine, physical style and mindful presence on the field are already at a top, top level.

18. Jesus Navas, Manchester City

Signing Jesus Navas was a remarkably smart move by Manchester City, solving one of their biggest problems from last season by recruiting a superb player for a respectable price.

Homesickness concerns aside, Navas looks set to rip the English Premier League to pieces with his near-unrivalled pace. He's more a traditional winger than anything else City have on the roster, and that should allow them to negate the width problems they've experienced for two or three seasons.

His crossing brings renewed value to Edin Dzeko's presence in the side, while Alvaro Negredo will undoubtedly prosper given they've played together in Sevilla.

A natural wide presence will also unlock more space for the likes of David Silva, Stevan Jovetic and Samir Nasri to work with.

16. Marouane Fellaini, Everton

Will the Belgian secure a move to Arsenal or Manchester United as talkSPORT suggest? How will he fit in Roberto Martinez's free-flowing system (if he stays), and which position will he play?

Whatever the outcome, one thing is assured: Fellaini is good enough to take on any challenge—be it at Everton still or at a top club in David Moyes' United.

He played an unorthodox role last season, just behind the striker, and the other side of his game really came to the fore. He was the target for his centre-backs to aim at, and no opposing player could outmuscle him.

It's well-documented that the Belgian prefers to play as a holding midfielder, so we've graded him in that position. Should Martinez adopt a 3-4-3 at Goodison Park, there's no room for a burly No. 10.

14. Santi Cazorla, Arsenal

The Spaniard arrived for around £15 million after helping his old club, Malaga, into the UEFA Champions League for the first time in the team's history, and from the first whistle he became a key player under Arsene Wenger.

He has that typical Iberian flavour to his game, controlling the ball with ease and making the extraordinary look simple. At times he can be accused of slowing attacks down a little too much, but he spent much of the first season adapting to a different pace on the pitch.

Outside the box he's a menace, so reliable in possession to help create sustained pressure yet capable of scoring and assisting too.

If Arsenal are to progress this season, Cazorla needs to stand up once again.

9. Shinji Kagawa, Manchester United

Shinji Kagawa was criminally misused by Sir Alex Ferguson throughout the 2012-13 season. As a result, the Japanese star failed to kick on and become the world-beater he was at Borussia Dortmund.

Fans have high hopes that David Moyes will utilise him as a talisman from the No. 10 position, and if he does, he will unlock the Japanese ace's game-changing abilities and attributes.

There are few better at finding space between the lines than Kagawa, and his first touch is simply to die for. Ping it in to the former Cerezo Osaka midfielder's feet, and watch him wreak havoc, flummoxing defensive midfield lines and bringing others into play.

His shooting leaves a little to be desired, but as far as playmaking midfielders go, he's up there with the very best...if he's used correctly.

7. Coutinho, Liverpool

Philippe Coutinho likely features a little higher than many were expecting, but don't doubt his quality—he is absolutely nuts.

It's a rare treat to see someone so able to create and exploit space in even the most organised defensive structures, and he proved on many occasions last season that he's too hot to handle.

Fellow colleagues Iago Aspas, Daniel Sturridge and Luis Suarez will be hyped going into the season as the difference-makers for Brendan Rodgers' side, but Coutinho is the key player here.

If he performs consistently over the course of the season, the Reds could be in for a series of cricket scores.

Opposing players gravitate toward him wherever he's playing, and just as they think they're odds-on for the tackle/interception, he produces a wonderful through ball to put his striker one vs. one with the goalkeeper.

6. David Silva, Manchester City

His form dipped in and out as he tired, prompting suggestions he was being overused, over-relied upon and subsequently became exhausted.

Roberto Mancini's torrid tactics didn't help the Spaniard last year, but you can bet Manuel Pellegrini will get the very best out of a player who can, on his day, absolutely steal the show.

That day didn't come around often enough last season, but if he can replicate the form shown throughout the 2011-12 campaign, Manchester City will be in for a trophy-laden year.

Silva has an ability like no other in the English Premier League—not even Juan Mata—and he can produce some of the most jaw-dropping reverse passes and intricate dinks inside the penalty area you'll ever see.

Twenty yards from goal with a yard of space, this man is guaranteed to pick out a pass that will hurt you. It's gob-smacking at times.

5. Eden Hazard, Chelsea

Arriving under the heavy burden of a £32 million price tag, Eden Hazard showed maturity beyond his years not only to cope with the pressure but thrive under it.

He took the bull by the horns, beating Wigan Athletic on the opening day of the 2012-13 season almost single-handedly, then contributed heavily to an unbeaten run of eight games to cement the Blues' spot at the top of the table.

His form dipped alarmingly in midseason, but at 21 years of age that's natural. The ruthless sacking of Roberto Di Matteo and terrace-wide dislike of new instalment Rafa Benitez hardly helped either.

Hazard is poised to improve again in the coming season, being used opposite either Andre Schuerrle or Oscar in Jose Mourinho's 4-2-3-1 formation.

His raw pace and acceleration will serve the team extremely well in a counterattacking setup, so expect an improved goal tally from the Belgian in what represents the biggest season of his young life so far.

4. Gareth Bale, Tottenham Hotspur

Gareth Bale carried Tottenham Hotspur at times last season, shouldering the responsibility of three players' positions to give them a fighting chance of UEFA Champions League football.

They came up short in the end, but the second half of the 2012-13 season showed Bale's immense work rate and willingness to graft for the team—as well as his unbelievable technique and quality on the ball.

He scored 21 Premier League goals from an assortment of positions in midfield, drifting across the advanced line to find space and take advantage of weaknesses.

Few defenders successfully shackled him, and Sir Alex Ferguson had to commit three players (Rio Ferdinand, Phil Jones and Rafael) to mark him out of the game when Manchester United visited White Hart Lane to achieve a 1-1 draw.

2. Luis Suarez, Liverpool

The big question surrounding Luis Suarez ahead of the 2012-13 season was whether or not he could become the 20-goal striker Liverpool so badly craved.

He answered his doubters with an emphatic "yes," combining his already stellar buildup play and movement with a deft finish and confidence in front of goal.

Twenty-nine goals and five assists later, no one is doubting him, and he rightly comes in second place in our rankings ahead of a host of world-class names.

His ability to play behind the striker, between the lines, as a false-nine or from either flank makes him an incredibly versatile and sought-after commodity, and Arsenal are seriously testing the Anfield club's resolve with some monstrous bids for his services.

No matter which kit he dons next season, he's going to be a goal machine.